doc/gate-mechanics.txt
author Petr Sumbera <petr.sumbera@oracle.com>
Wed, 19 Dec 2012 02:21:27 -0800
branchs11-update
changeset 2451 f54396da08ea
parent 41 50cc241a2b9a
child 3836 56af60eb6020
permissions -rw-r--r--
15822371 SUNBT7204409 Upgrade libxslt to version 1.1.27 15807903 problem in LIBRARY/LIBXSLT


                Userland Gate Mechanics

The userland consolidation operates a set of Mercurial repositories that work
together to manage the tools, source code, and build recipies.  These
repositories are the integration repository, gate, and external mirror.  This is
similiar to how the Solaris ON, SFW, and other gates operates, however there
are a few subtle differences.  In ON and other consolidations, the integration
repository is that gate and contains the canonical source.  Once a changeset
is committed, it becomes a part of the canonical source.  In the case of ON,
the changeset is immediately pushed to the clone repository.  SFW and other
consolidations push changes from their canonical gate to a clone repository
nightly.  In the userland consolidation, developers will commit changes to the
integration gate.  These changes will not be accepted until some basic
validation is performed.  Once the validation completes successfully, the
changes are accepted and pushed into the canonical source gate.

Integration repository (ssh://ulhg@userland//nevada/incoming)
	The integration gate is the Mercurial repository that all tools, source
    code, and build recipies are committed to.  Unlike ON, SFW, and other
    Solaris gates this source code repository does not contains the canonical
    source for the product.  This repository is a staging area for change
    integration and acceptance.

	    hg push to integration gate
	        |
	        v
	    lock gate
	        |
	        v
	    validate changeset(s) -> failed --> rollback changeset(s) 
	        |                                   |
	        v                                   |
	    accepted                                |
	        |                                   |
	        v                                   v
	    push to clone -------------------> unlock gate
	                                            |
	                                            v
	                                       update bug db
	                                            |
	                                            v
	                                       notify committer

    So, the basic flow works something like this:  A user pushes a changeset
    to the integration gate.  Mercurial locks the gate to block any other
    attempts to operate on the gate while it is validating the changeset.
    At this point, validation is started in the background, a message is
    displayed, and control is returned to the user.  Validation continues
    in the background.  If validation completes successfully, the changeset(s)
    are pushed to the clone, the gate is unlocked, the bug database is updated,
    and the user is notified of the changeset acceptance.  If the validation
    fails, the changeset(s) are rolled back, the gate is unlocked, and the
    user is notified of the failure.

    Changeset validation will include the following:
        multi-delta update check
        commit comment validation
        bugdb validation
      future operations
        source archive download
        incremental build on all architectures
        unit test on all architectures
        package publication for all architectures


Canonical source repository (ssh://anon@userland//nevada/gate)
    The clone gate is actually the mercurial repository that contains the
    canonical tools, source code, and build recipies for the product.  It
    should always be in a stable, buildable state.  When changes are pushed
    to this gate, they are mirrored on the external mirror repository from
    here.

        clone update
            |
            v
        push to external mirror
            |
            v
        notify gatelings


External mirror repository (ssh://[email protected]//hg/userland/gate)
    The external mirror is the mercurial repository that contains an externally
    accessible copy of the canonical tools, source code, and build recipies for
    the product.  It should always be in a stable, buildable state.

        external mirror update
            |
            v
        notify gatelings

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